Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Honda HS35 Snowblower
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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blumonster
Location: Wisc.
Joined: Oct 14, 2011
Points: 163
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Honda HS35 Snowblower
Original Message Oct 14, 2011 4:29 pm |
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Hello, This is my first post here. I recently got a used old Honda HS35 snowblower for $80. It starts and runs with choke 'closed'. The choke knob is loose, moves around with the vibration.And when I put the choke on 'open' position it most of the time surges (up and down). I added some seafoam and noticed that it helped it stabilize on that day. I started it again today and it still surges when the choke is 'open' during the first few minutes, then stabilizes. Is this normal? To start the machine the choke needs to be 'closed' or it won't start. This is my first snowblower, I have not worked on a snowblower before. Auger's rubber parts are not new, the previous owner said he replaced them 3 years ago.It looks like rubber parts are worn by about half an inch maybe.Because I can see where the tip of the rubber was at one point by looking at the very thin end of the rubber. Scraper bar is not rubber, it looks like it is made from harder plastic and the edges have 3-5 indents froms scraping. Do I have to replace these this year or will they work for now? Is the price I paid fair for the machine I described above? Is it too much? Thanks.
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blumonster
Location: Wisc.
Joined: Oct 14, 2011
Points: 163
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Re: Honda HS35 Snowblower
Reply #40 Nov 20, 2011 6:37 pm |
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It is made in Japan. GX160 seems to have a higher height so it may not an easy fit. It would be pretty stupid to spend more money on this HS35 but I have done many dumb stuff too.
It is the best of you just wait for the snow and see how it works.I am sure it will be enough for the purpose you have in mind for the HS35.Just impatience. Snow will be here for a long time, so let's enjoy the last days without snow.Our neighbor was cutting their grass today.I did not do it.
Oops, you had snow already...
This message was modified Nov 20, 2011 by blumonster
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blumonster
Location: Wisc.
Joined: Oct 14, 2011
Points: 163
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Re: Honda HS35 Snowblower
Reply #42 Nov 21, 2011 11:52 am |
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I wish you had a tachometer on your HS35 so I know what to expect on my HS35. I am sure there are other HS35 owners here with tachometers on their blowers and wish they chime in. If the RPM is too low, the blower will not work too well provided that you have good auger rubbers and scrapper. I specifically bought this blower for cleaning my pond and the deck. I almost sunk my blower in the pond last year. That would not have been really funny for me.
How do you connect the tachometer and where did you get it from, MN_Runner? Is the RPM gauge reliable?Is it possible that it is not showing RPM lower than it really is?
Did you get the new spring?If it works in increasing the RPM to normal level I might get one as well. Who else has Honda HS35? Would not it be more dangerous if the snowblower is as heavy as HS35, on the pond?
This message was modified Nov 21, 2011 by blumonster
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blumonster
Location: Wisc.
Joined: Oct 14, 2011
Points: 163
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Re: Honda HS35 Snowblower
Reply #44 Nov 21, 2011 3:15 pm |
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HS35 is lighter than my HS928. I almost sunk it last year when I went over the pond when the ice was not thick enough. I would buy tachometer from Norther Tools: http://www.northerntool.com/shop/tools/product_524744_524744?cm_mmc=Google-pla-_-Engines-_-Small%20Engine%20Accessories-_-160590&ci_sku=160590&ci_gpa=pla&ci_kw={keyword}
How do you connect it to snow blower?
Is your tachometer like this?: http://www.amazon.com/Digital-Photo-Laser-Tachometer-Contact/dp/B001N4QY66/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1321906276&sr=8-4 If not, would something like this work?
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RedOctobyr
Location: Lowell area, MA
Joined: Nov 5, 2011
Points: 282
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Re: Honda HS35 Snowblower
Reply #46 Nov 21, 2011 9:49 pm |
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You might be able to make an optical one work, somehow. But it would be a pain, I think. You'd need to get access to the crankshaft and put something reflective on it. Then leave that exposed (potentially dangerous, or likely not practical while also using the machine) any time you want to take a measurement.
The kind at the Northern Tool link are quite simple, you just wrap a wire around the spark plug wire, and it senses (via induction) when the spark plug fires. If the plug wire is exposed, you don't even have to install it permanently. Just wrap the tachometer wire around spark plug wire, and ground its other wire to the machine's frame.
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